"A beautiful creature she was, of snowy whiteness, exquisite form,
and moving as if on air; her proud head erect, her dark eyes beaming
with ardor. ...As fleet as the wind - only a transient glance of her
unearthly loveliness was ever enjoyed by the admiring beholder."

The Indian legend told of a single white doe that roamed an otherwise
abandoned island where, once, English families sent by Sir Walter Raleigh
had attempted to settle, only to vanish. Virginia Dare, the first English
child born in the New World, and her parents, Ananias and Eleanor, were
members of this "lost colony."

Virginia, raised by the Croatan Indians, was claimed by an old and powerful
medicine man who, because he could not have her, cast a spell turning
her into a white doe. The Indians hunted her for different reasons -
one for love, another for hate. Shot in the heart at the same moment
by two special arrows - a mother-of-pearl one meant to save, a silver
one meant to kill the white doe returned briefly to her beautiful human
form only to die a short time later.

Virginia Dare's body disappeared at the same time a white doe was seen
bounding off into the forest. Even today some claim to have caught glimpses
of fleeting white late in the evenings. Does the spirit of the white
doe still roam the woodlands of Roanoke Island?

Has
Virginia Dare returned to Roanoke Island?
Can you find the White Doe in the picture? Look closely!
This phenomena showed up in the Elizabethan Gardens to the surprise
of all. You can only see it from one place in the Gardens, and it is
up high in a tree. When you walk to the tree itself you cannot find
it.